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 Jay Whitenoreply@blogger.com2008-07-11T05:52:56.101-05:006 Mistakes That Blew Up Your Job InterviewWritten on 7/11/2008 by Abhijeet Mukherjee, of Jeet Blog.
Last week I talked about 5 Key Steps To Acing Your First Job Interview. But how many of us are really able to hit the bullseye in their job interviews? How many walk out with an appointment letter and a glow on their face? The answer - only a few of us.
That's one of the main reasons we have ever increasing number of job hunters and why interview preparation is in itself a thriving business today.
It's not always that you fail an interview due to weak academic backgrounds and inadequate skill sets. You will hear stories of people getting selected for a job in spite of not having the required educational qualification and experience. How did they do it? Simple, by presenting themselves better then the other candidates and not committing the mistakes that I am going to talk about. You committed these mistakes and that's why you failed and the guy next door who wasn't as experienced and educated as you, got that cherished job!
- You didn't prepare
You knew there was an interview coming up next week and you really wanted that job. However you didn't think about preparing for the interview and researching the company and various other things related to the interview. Why should you? You've got all the experience and knowledge, right?! Complacency is the mother of destruction, and this complacency about yourself, your experience and your skills cost you the job.
So the mantra is - Even if you were the CEO of your previous company, you should take some time out and prepare for the upcoming interview. There's no harm in doing that and it will empower you with more knowledge and confidence for the interview.
- The "I don't care" attitude
You arrived late for the interview, were not dressed properly, didn't carry all the documents required and had an air of supremacy around you which had developed from the belief that you are the right person and the only person fit for the job. And that's why you didn't elaborately answer most of the questions asked by the HR executive.
Such an attitude can easily ruin the prospects of the best candidate out there.
- You were aggressive
The interviewer tried to test your patience by asking you some weird questions or similar questions again and again. Instead of being patient and responding politely, you lost your cool and spoke in a loud voice.
You should know that it's a very common tactic of testing the candidate's patience where the interviewer tries to provoke him in order to check if the candidate freaks out too early. This is done to see if the candidate would be able to work in a high pressure corporate environment. Losing your patience in such situations reduces the chances of your getting selected in the interview.
- You begged for the job
Anticipating that you may not have a good chance for getting selected in the interview, you resorted to begging for the job and emotionally alter the HR executive's decision.
Believe me, when you beg for the job, the interviewer on the other side loses all respect for you and makes sure that you are rejected. It's a give and take relationship and the employer doesn't pay the interviewer to hire those who haven't prepared well and don't respect themselves.
- You badmouthed your previous employer or your boss
You were already employed and hence you were asked the obvious question, "Why you want to switch jobs?" Iin the answer to that question you criticized your employer and your boss and said that you didn't like to work there.
Portraying a negative attitude towards your previous employer can go against you because the interviewer might consider you to be wrong, not your employer.
- You didn't think beyond the money
You just talked about money and nothing else. When asked why you want to switch jobs or what do you expect from your new employer, your answer was always centered around the money factor.
This is the dumbest of all mistakes and the most commonly committed too. Even if you are in it for money, you shouldn't show that. Instead talk about career and other benefits related to the job. I hope this article helps a job seeker in getting the best out of his interview and ultimately securing the job.
Cheers,
Abhijeet
 Jay Whitenoreply@blogger.com2008-07-10T08:11:11.881-05:00How Social Media Can Help (or Kill) Your Career and Life By now we have all heard about job recruiters using Google to search for ghosts in your closet. You know what I mean, in addition to credit and background checks, they search looking for your name and look for your myspace page, your facebook profile, your existence on hate websites, etc.
For the most part, I am all for this; the internet is public domain so if you put it something out there, accept it as yours.
As someone who has had to hire employees and locate tenants, I have held dozens of interviews and done my fair share of credit checks. My conclusion is that they just don't define character the way chat room fodder and social networking sites do. The latter provides a real world look into someone's character when they believe that no one else is watching.
In this little article I am going to offer up a handful of ways for you navigate through this trend because, well, it's not a trend. Search and Social Media are here for good and if you are in my camp, you believe that we're still in the infancy stages.
Some of my tips are ways to use social media to your advantage and some are pitfalls to watch out for. Take 'em or leave 'em, they are reality so apply as you see fit.
- Does FriendFeed or Twitter belong on your Resume?
Well, that all depends. If you have a strong following on these sites and the crowd relies on you for your expert insight, much like a Muhammed Saleem, then yes, by all means include your URLs. However, and this is ridiculously critical, do not send twitter messages during a phone interview! The time stamps will kill you (I know someone this happened to; he was twittering during an interview...).
- How can I prove my knowledge?
If you are in a field that is even somewhat competitive, start differentiating yourself now. Start answering questions on Linked In or perhaps Yahoo! Answers and then promote your profile. If you are able to show some passion and thoughtful insight for a particular topic, you'll stand head and shoulders above the candidate that is not online.
Company processes are moving more online each day and the more you can show that you're not only educated but willing to creatively work in an online venue, the more valuable you are.
If you are passed simple "look at me" profiles and you have a decent blog, a successful facebook app, or something else 'good', then promote it. If your personal/hobby site is successful, you are immediately more interesting than the person that has nothing cooking on the internet. However, if your blog only has 4 RSS subscribers, is filled with profanity or contains naked pictures of some celebrity, resist the urge. Success is viewed favorably (obviously) while mediocrity and vulgarity is viewed negatively.
When I decide to look for a new job, you can gaurantee that I'll be telling the world about DLM (hint, hint).
- Standardization (i.e. Keep the Story Straight)
Your resume and online presence should be the same all over the place. If you have a twitter profile, a Monster.com resume, a Careerbuilder resume, and a hard copy, they should all be relatively the same. Nothing says BS like different stories, dates, and accomplishments.
- Keywords
These days, most resumes are scanned into some corporate recruiting database and assigned keywords. When a manager has a position to fill, keywords are searched for and the query results show all the resumes that match. The same is true for Linked In and similar sites.
In this case, you may deviate from standardization and use varying keywords on each site/database to see what sticks and what brings in the best response. Refine your approach based on the calls/emails you receive. You should choose keywords for your location, certifications, hobbies, job titles and skills (but don't use ultra-generic buzz words, especially in your resume's objective).
- Aliases
We all like to be truthful. However, the fact remains that if you are using your real name for everything, you will be burned eventually. Professional sites deserve your real name because it can eventually help you. Gambler's Anonymous message boards, Stop Smoking Forums, your Digg profile, comments on blogs, and any other site that could be viewed as a time waster or otherwise have a possible negative connotation, deserves a pseudonym.
To really illustrate this, here is the del.icio.us page for a recent DLM article. On the right side you will see the user names of everyone that bookmarked this article. Some people chose to use their real names! Click on a name and you will see everything this person has ever bookmarked. Wouldn't it suck if there were porn sites and other shady pages listed?
Your name is your online fingerprint so touch things with caution.
- I live in a Dump
I am not sure that I would call these last two social media, more technology in general. The advent of Google Street View and other mapping applications gives people an opportunity to zoom in on your neighborhood and in some cases your home. While I do not agree with this, some people may see a dilapidated neighborhood as a sign of weakness and/or failure. When putting your address on a resume, at least consider this point. Again, I am not crazy about it but it's a fact that we all have to deal with.
- Calendars
2 years ago I wrote an article entitled, Death by Google Calender. It showed how bad guys could easily search public calendars and then rob you because you told them you'd be out at a card game (or otherwise not home). I was very specific and it was quite an episode as the article was picked up by Slashdot. I ultimately edited the article after the calendar owner emailed me indicating that they would switch their settings to private instead of public.
In any event, the same holds true here. See the irritatingly small image below? Do you see that button that says, "Search Public Calendars"? Well, what if the hiring manager tossed your name in there and found out how your really spent your weekends? Again, be smart.
 At this point I think you catch my drift; be creative, smart, and use social media to the fullest. But - don't lambaste people on blogs or share personal details unless you want them shared and unless you are willing to take the heat.
How else can you use the internet and social networking to make yourself more appealing to hiring managers? Let us know in the comments.
- Jay

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